Groundhog Day - 02/02/2020 rare palindrome date

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Winston

Lorenzo von Matterhorn
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Sunday's date is a rare palindrome that hasn't happened in over 900 years

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news...2-2020-rare-palindrome-02-02-2020/4633400002/

While various forms of palindrome dates are fairly common, 02/02/2020 has the unique distinction of reading the same backward and forward when written out in eight digits in multiple date systems, according to University of Portland professor Aziz Inan.

For starters, it's an eight-digit palindrome: 02022020. Many palindrome dates are only symmetrical if you write the date with seven digits (1-10-2011) — or in some cases even fewer (9-10-19).

But even more rare, according to Inan, is that Sunday's date is an international palindrome: It works whether you write the date as "Month/Day/Year" or "Day/Month/Year," as many countries do.

Inan calls such dates "ubiquitous palindromes," and there won't be another one for 101 years. After that, you'll have to wait until March 3, 3030.

According to Inan's calculations, the last such palindrome date to occur was 11/11/1111 – more than 900 years ago.
 
Thanks for the post :)

I have also always liked Ground Hog Day :)
Not because of the subterranean rodent, but it signals most of the winter is over. Days are getting longer :)
 
Even more, this is the 33rd day of the year, also a palindrome. And due to leap year there are 333 days left in the year, also a palindrome.

 
The weather here was excellent, good enough to actually fly a Groundhog.
 
We need to take a poll and see how many people on TRF remember what a Groundhog is in this context, with bonus points for naming its inventor.

Now we're way off topic...back to palindromic dates!
 
Lovely discussion but isn't 01-02-2010 a "ubiquitous palindromes"? Our am i missing something? A mere 10 years ago, not 900.
You're missing the "multiple date systems" part. Specifically those that normally use day/month/year, or month/day/year, or year/month/day, giving 02/02/2020, or 02/02/2020, or 2020/02/02, all being palindromes.

In your example of Jan-02-2020 can be written in the US as 01/02/2010 or in the UK as 02/01/2010, only one of which is a palindrome.
 
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